Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems

The amounts of earthworm surface casts were monitored for 200 days after commencement of casting in three alley cropping experiments of different ages and hedgerow species. Casts were collected twice per week in transects from under the hedgerow to the middle of the interrow space. Average annual cumulative amounts of casts were higher in alley cropping systems with one to five years of cropping than in the no-tree control. After five years of cropping, amounts of casts were similar in all treatments. Within the alley cropping systems, casting activity was highest immediately under the hedgerows and decreased towards the middle of the interrow space. In systems using Leucaena leucocephala as hedgerow species, the hedgerow to interrow space gradient of casting activity became more pronounced with increasing length of cropping. Casting activity in the interrow space was reduced by 12%, 55%, 80% and 86% in the first, fourth, sixth and seventh year of cropping, respectively, compared to the casting activity under the hedgerows. Senna siamea, which produced a more recalcitrant mulch, did not show such a strong decline in casting in the interrow space. In a Dactyladenia barteri system, the difference in casting between interrow space and hedgerows was insignificant. With perpendicular distance from the hedge, largest gradients in casting activity occurred close to the hedgerows with up to –4.00 Mg ha–1 cm–1 in L. leucocephala but only –1.23 and –0.76 Mg ha–1 cm–1 in S. siamea and D. barteri, respectively. The shading effect of trees and a relatively low level of soil disturbance is apparently more beneficial for earthworms in a cropped system than a high supply of readily available food from fast decomposing L. leucocephala prunings. Introduction

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hauser, S., Asawalam, D.O., Vanlauwe, Bernard
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1998
Subjects:leucaena leucocephala, senna siamea, alley cropping, hedgerow intercropping,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100999
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-100999
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1009992023-02-15T06:45:21Z Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems Hauser, S. Asawalam, D.O. Vanlauwe, Bernard leucaena leucocephala senna siamea alley cropping hedgerow intercropping The amounts of earthworm surface casts were monitored for 200 days after commencement of casting in three alley cropping experiments of different ages and hedgerow species. Casts were collected twice per week in transects from under the hedgerow to the middle of the interrow space. Average annual cumulative amounts of casts were higher in alley cropping systems with one to five years of cropping than in the no-tree control. After five years of cropping, amounts of casts were similar in all treatments. Within the alley cropping systems, casting activity was highest immediately under the hedgerows and decreased towards the middle of the interrow space. In systems using Leucaena leucocephala as hedgerow species, the hedgerow to interrow space gradient of casting activity became more pronounced with increasing length of cropping. Casting activity in the interrow space was reduced by 12%, 55%, 80% and 86% in the first, fourth, sixth and seventh year of cropping, respectively, compared to the casting activity under the hedgerows. Senna siamea, which produced a more recalcitrant mulch, did not show such a strong decline in casting in the interrow space. In a Dactyladenia barteri system, the difference in casting between interrow space and hedgerows was insignificant. With perpendicular distance from the hedge, largest gradients in casting activity occurred close to the hedgerows with up to –4.00 Mg ha–1 cm–1 in L. leucocephala but only –1.23 and –0.76 Mg ha–1 cm–1 in S. siamea and D. barteri, respectively. The shading effect of trees and a relatively low level of soil disturbance is apparently more beneficial for earthworms in a cropped system than a high supply of readily available food from fast decomposing L. leucocephala prunings. Introduction 1998 2019-04-24T12:29:43Z 2019-04-24T12:29:43Z Journal Article Hauser, S., Asawalam, D.O. & Vanlauwe, B. (1998). Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems. Agroforestry Systems, 41, 127–137. 0167-4366 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100999 en Limited Access
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic leucaena leucocephala
senna siamea
alley cropping
hedgerow intercropping
leucaena leucocephala
senna siamea
alley cropping
hedgerow intercropping
spellingShingle leucaena leucocephala
senna siamea
alley cropping
hedgerow intercropping
leucaena leucocephala
senna siamea
alley cropping
hedgerow intercropping
Hauser, S.
Asawalam, D.O.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
description The amounts of earthworm surface casts were monitored for 200 days after commencement of casting in three alley cropping experiments of different ages and hedgerow species. Casts were collected twice per week in transects from under the hedgerow to the middle of the interrow space. Average annual cumulative amounts of casts were higher in alley cropping systems with one to five years of cropping than in the no-tree control. After five years of cropping, amounts of casts were similar in all treatments. Within the alley cropping systems, casting activity was highest immediately under the hedgerows and decreased towards the middle of the interrow space. In systems using Leucaena leucocephala as hedgerow species, the hedgerow to interrow space gradient of casting activity became more pronounced with increasing length of cropping. Casting activity in the interrow space was reduced by 12%, 55%, 80% and 86% in the first, fourth, sixth and seventh year of cropping, respectively, compared to the casting activity under the hedgerows. Senna siamea, which produced a more recalcitrant mulch, did not show such a strong decline in casting in the interrow space. In a Dactyladenia barteri system, the difference in casting between interrow space and hedgerows was insignificant. With perpendicular distance from the hedge, largest gradients in casting activity occurred close to the hedgerows with up to –4.00 Mg ha–1 cm–1 in L. leucocephala but only –1.23 and –0.76 Mg ha–1 cm–1 in S. siamea and D. barteri, respectively. The shading effect of trees and a relatively low level of soil disturbance is apparently more beneficial for earthworms in a cropped system than a high supply of readily available food from fast decomposing L. leucocephala prunings. Introduction
format Journal Article
topic_facet leucaena leucocephala
senna siamea
alley cropping
hedgerow intercropping
author Hauser, S.
Asawalam, D.O.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_facet Hauser, S.
Asawalam, D.O.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_sort Hauser, S.
title Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
title_short Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
title_full Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
title_fullStr Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
title_full_unstemmed Spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
title_sort spatial and temporal gradients of earthworm casting activity in alley cropping systems
publishDate 1998
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100999
work_keys_str_mv AT hausers spatialandtemporalgradientsofearthwormcastingactivityinalleycroppingsystems
AT asawalamdo spatialandtemporalgradientsofearthwormcastingactivityinalleycroppingsystems
AT vanlauwebernard spatialandtemporalgradientsofearthwormcastingactivityinalleycroppingsystems
_version_ 1779051018052435968